WILEY-BLACKWELL ISA Journals: Foreign Policy Analysis (FPA) International Studies Perspectives (ISP) International Political Sociology (IPS) International Studies Quarterly (ISQ) International Studies Review (ISR) Content Style Sheet THIS DOCUMENT LAST UPDATED ON: 10 March 2010 Journal house style points Main style guides Chicago Manual of Style Merriam-Webster s 10 th edn. Supplemented as necessary by Level of edit Please refer to the Definitions of copy-editing standards (in-house Wiley-Blackwell staff only; see guidelines on Copy: Procedures for dealing with the most common problems when handling copy available on the Intranet in: Department Information/Production/User Manuals & Guides, Copy-Editing & Graphics) document before selecting the level of edit required. Minimal Standard High 1
Language Voice Keep voice as used by author Use passive voice throughout: abstract; text (select all that apply) (science/medical requirement fading practice) Use active voice throughout: abstract; text (select all that apply) Spelling Recommended spelling Australian: Macquarie Dictionary UK: Oxford Concise English Dictionary US: Merriam Webster s Collegiate Dictionary change all ise to ize other UK Enlish to US English (except in proper names and titles, e.g., Centre (not Center) of International Studies, University of Cambridge (UK). Refer to the list of journal spelling exceptions (Always endeavour to use the most up-to-date editions of dictionaries.) Consistency of recommended spelling Consistent throughout journal Consistent within article (default to author) Hyphenation Follow recommended dictionary Apply minimal hyphenation Refer to the list of journal hyphenation exceptions (Please refer to section 1.5 of the Wiley-Blackwell House Style Guide, section on HYPHENS, for more detail on usage of hyphens in compound terms.) Punctuation Quotations Single quotation marks, with closing punctuation outside marks (unless it belongs to the quoted material) and double marks for quotes within quotes: Australian and UK style 2
Double quotation marks, with closing punctuation inside marks and single marks for quotes within quotes: US style Order of parentheses in text ([ ]): US style {[()]}: UK style (( )): Australian style References Harvard Vancouver Content-specific style points, editor preferences Language list commas a must Use for example, in parentheses, not e.g. ; that is, not i.e. Toward (not towards) International Relations: spell out on first reference; IR thereafter more than 100 NGOs preferred to over 100 NGOs General less than or equal to and greater than or equal to --- straight Variables italic Lowercase and cap Greek letters roman Lowercase professor/assistant professor when used after a name, but capitalize when it comes before the name. Exception to this rule for named professorships. For example: the professor John Doe, assistant professor of political science, Professor John Doe John Doe, Fellow of the Royal Academy A fellowship for 3
Math functions cos, sin, tan, cosh, sinh, tanh, log, ln, max, min roman In the 80s, 1980 s change to 1980s Level of significance (probability) p lowercase, italic, no zero before decimal dot for p values En-dash for ranges and also between names Em-dash for parenthetical statements Percentage sign used % (20%, 40% and 80% (repeat %)). (5 10%) F (1,11)=12.88, p(0.01), SE, SD Use SI units: hours, minutesseconds, Per the style guide, most prefixes should be closed up against the root word instead of hyphenated (e.g., underconceptualized not under-conceptualized ). See style sheet for exceptions. Use numbered footnote for first page (i.e., 1 ), not asterisk.. It s best to avoid rewording as much as possible. Even changing can to could, Prior to to before, and deleting Of course could result in an author wanting to change it back at proofs. After the abstract, the quote should be set off on a separate line, not as the last sentence of the abstract ( Of all the rights ). In Forum section, preserve authors voices. Limit the use of quotation marks around words unless they are direct quotes or refer to words as terms. Possessives: no second s with names ending in s (e.g., Morris not Morris s) 4
Math: preserve authors' style Publisher names. Leave publisher names as they are unless they are inconsistent. Include state abbreviations only when there could be confusion or the city or publisher is not well known. (In the cases of Lynne Rienner and Westview in Boulder, do not use CO. Also, Lynne Rienner sufficient on its own; no need to add Publishers. If the name of the State is given in the publisher s name (for example, University of Michigan Press), do not add the state to the location. Names of newspapers: Per Chicago, do not italicize or capitalize the name of a newspaper in the text. For example: the New York Times, and the Washington Post. NOT The New York Times. Numbers Spell out numbers in text: 1 9. From 10 onwards, use numerals. Spell out at the beginning of a sentence except in the abstract. 1,000 (4-digit numbers with comma); 10,000 (5-digit and more with comma) Numbers with units always in figures (5 cm, 6 kg, etc.) Numbers that begin the sentence, title, or text headings (if possible, reword the sentence to avoid beginning with numbers) (e.g., Forty-eight percent of---, Fifteen participants, Two-hour experiment, Four patients, etc.) Numbers with common fractions in words (e.g., one-fifth of the class, two-thirds majority, reduced by three-fourths) Numbers universally accepted (Fourth of July, Ten Commandments) Numbers used in combination of figures and words (e.g., 2 two-way interaction, ten 7-point scales, twenty 6-year-olds) mid-1990s Numbers with ordinal and cardinals treated in the same way Seventeenth century, not 17th century Page range in full: 189-192 NOT 189-92 Use a zero before decimal points (e.g., 0.21, 0.48); Do not use zero before decimal for p values and r values. (e.g., r (24)=.43, p<.05) For dates, use US-style day-month-year (January 1, 2009) for all dates Common abbreviations that do not need to be spelled out 5
Word list, spelling preferences, common acronyms, etc. a acknowledgment/s (not acknowledgement/s) a historical (not an historical), but ahistorical anti-foreigner antifoundationalism anti-globalization antistate anti-immigrant a priori (rom.) b BA c coauthor coeditor coproduction, coevolved comparative foreign policy (CFP) counterelites counterintuitive counter-pole cross-cultural d double quotes database data set decision maker, decision making, decision-making process de-dramatizing de facto (ital.) de-link e eighteenth-century Enlightenment Eastern or Western (almost all references are political; please capitalize all when editing) email European Union (n.), EU (adj.) Ex-ante (ital.) f farther (with real or metaphorical distances) foreign policy analysis (FPA) g G8 geocommercialism great-power blocs groupthink h healthcare (n) health-care (adj) higher-order (adj.) high-salience (adj.) hyper-internationalized i inter-epistemic, intraepistemic Internet intraregional, intraindustrial intraparadigmatic ipso facto (ital.) 6
j k l liberalism, liberal ideas Liberals, Social Democrats, Statists, and National Communist logrolling m multireligious multiperspectivists n neo-neo adversaries non-anticipation nondemocratic non-governmental organization nonprofit nonstate, transstate, or antistate non-agentive non-epistemological non-social science nonviolent o Objectivistically, subjectivistically online offline ordinary least squares 7
p p value (lower case p, italic) peacebulding peacekeeping PhD policymakers, policymaking, policy-making process post-apartheid postcapitalist postcolonial Postcommunist Post-conflict postindustrial postmodern Postnationalist posttest power-sharing pretest pro-integration problem solving, problem-solving s semiglobal sociocultureal superregions Student s t-test italic/u-test (Ucap, italic). v q t twentieth-century (adj.); twentieth century (n.) three-stage least squares method w Webcast Web site r raison d être re-examine role taking, role-taking models u United States (n.), US (adj.) US/USA/UK Without dots xyz 8